35 Burst results for "Antioch"

"antioch" Discussed on Evangelism on SermonAudio

Evangelism on SermonAudio

05:41 min | 3 months ago

"antioch" Discussed on Evangelism on SermonAudio

"And so there's a lot of churches around that are not. And so we see that, therefore, they stayed there a long time. How many months do they stay there? They planted they planted the seed here. And they disciple these people speaking boldly in the lord who was bearing witness to the word of his grace, granting signs and wonders to be done by their hands, so God you're going to brand new area, speaking to the Jews, here we see that the miracles that were done was a verification to them. And but the multitude of the city was divided. It always happens. And parted some part sided with the Jews and part sided with the apostles. And when a violated attempt was made by both the gentiles and Jews, so there were the rejectors with their rulers of the politics got involved in it to abuse and to stoned them, they became aware of it until they heard about it, and they fled to lystra and Derby, cities in laconia, and to all the surrounding region, they were preaching the gospel there. So father we pray that you would just bless your word and give us open understanding and appreciation and power to proclaim your word as was reclaimed by these apostles and the old test and I can't even in other places. Lord, make us missionaries to a lost and dying world. We pray in Jesus name. Amen. So the pattern has been set. The synagogue they go to the synagogue first and we see the reaction, the people, there's a growing up opposition now, and there's a verse two that there were those who poisoned the minds of the people. So there was a lot of argument. There was a lot of people gossip, a lot of things that were going on. If we can, if we could turn down this heat a little bit, it is getting a little rough in here. It's always hard. These days, this time of year to know how to keep the temperature right. But here we see that there is growing opposition and politics we're getting involved in it, and they're now talking about stoning them. But they were the motives they persevered. They spoke boldly in verse three. And they kept speaking and they didn't always go to the synagogues. They would go house to house as Paul would think that that's what he would do. He would find a group of people. And they would disciple these people and teach them the word of God and teach them about the messiah and so this is what was going on here and it would cause more and more opposition to arise. And as a result of that, they had to flee from iconium now. One of the outskirts of the deeper you get into the book and to this area, the less civilized it became. Antioch was a bigger city and a little bit more developed than iconium was, but then as you go to lifestyle, you're really getting out into the boonies and into more of the what's called the Barbarians. But we see that the gospel is going forth and they are preaching and God is greatly blessing.

laconia iconium Paul Antioch
On this week's AP Religion Roundup, religious groups respond to the earthquake in Turkey with prayers and action, and religious advertising makes a play for Super Bowl viewers.

AP News Radio

02:08 min | 4 months ago

On this week's AP Religion Roundup, religious groups respond to the earthquake in Turkey with prayers and action, and religious advertising makes a play for Super Bowl viewers.

"On this week's AP religion roundup, religious groups respond to the earthquake in turkey with prayers and action and Christian advertising makes a play for Super Bowl viewers. Muslims in Indonesia held special prayers Friday afternoon for earthquake victims in turkey and Syria. The service came four days after an earthquake hammered a sprawling border region that is home to more than 13.5 million people. In the city of antakya, historically known as Antioch, members of the olive branches Israeli government rescue team held a short burial service for members of the Jewish community killed in the quake. Pope Francis said Wednesday that he's praying for those affected by the devastating 7.8 magnitude earthquake. Super Bowl Sunday is advertising's biggest night, but faith rarely makes an appearance among the beer and fast food commercials. But this year, an ad campaign is promoting Jesus with the $20 million he gets us campaign. AP and FL writer rob mati says a group that includes wealthy Christian boosters is using the biggest megaphone TV marketing money can buy to spread the word. Their message really is to share Jesus as well as in compassion for people to the world. And they've organized a $1 billion campaign and they're going out there and doing everything they possibly can to share this message, whether it's through sports on commercials, whether it's at events, they're here at the Super Bowl in Arizona. Madi says Christianity has long permeated NFL culture and regular fans are accustomed to expressions of faith. Every week, every game we see players who get on a knee hold hands and pray in a circle at midfield or somewhere close to it. Opponents from both sides and it happens every week, but we don't highlight it. We don't see that on camera as often. But he gets those campaign is funded by hobby lobby CEO, David green, and other anonymous donors. The ads direct people to a website where they can learn more about Jesus, find Bible reading plans and connect with people online or in person. I'm Walter ratliff.

Earthquake Antakya Super Bowl Olive Branches Israeli Governm Pope Francis Rob Mati Antioch Syria Indonesia Turkey AP Madi Arizona NFL David Green Walter Ratliff
"antioch" Discussed on Evangelism on SermonAudio

Evangelism on SermonAudio

03:12 min | 4 months ago

"antioch" Discussed on Evangelism on SermonAudio

"And in closing, <Speech_Male> I would simply draw <Speech_Male> your attention <Speech_Male> to the most excellent <Speech_Male> fruit that was <Speech_Male> produced in <Speech_Male> Antioch <Speech_Male> by such faithful <Speech_Male> training <Speech_Male> in the word of God <Speech_Male> by this discipleship <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> in the context <Silence> <Speech_Male> of the fellowship. <Speech_Male> Verse 26 <Speech_Male> and in Antioch, <Speech_Male> the disciples <Speech_Male> were first <SpeakerChange> called <Silence> Christian. <Speech_Male> <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> First called <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> Christians. Luke <Speech_Male> here reports that it <Speech_Male> was in Antioch that the <Speech_Male> followers of Christ were <Speech_Male> first dubbed <Speech_Male> Christians. In other words, <Speech_Male> because of <Speech_Male> the character of <Speech_Male> the witness of <Speech_Male> these first gentile <Speech_Male> believers <Speech_Male> because of the <Speech_Male> character of Christ that <Speech_Male> was stamped <Speech_Male> upon their very <Speech_Male> lives and <Speech_Male> the fact that <Speech_Male> his name <SpeakerChange> was <Speech_Male> ever on their lips, <Speech_Male> <Silence> the <Speech_Male> people <Speech_Male> knew who they were <Silence> <Speech_Male> and what they were all <Speech_Male> about. <Speech_Male> They could identify <Speech_Male> them as <Speech_Male> one <Speech_Male> of those who <Speech_Male> belonged <Speech_Male> to this Christ, <Speech_Male> one of those <Speech_Male> Christians. <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> Luke has not reporting <Speech_Male> here that these gentile <Speech_Male> believers <Speech_Male> coined <Speech_Male> the title of <Speech_Male> gentile and <Speech_Male> of Christian and <Speech_Male> applied it to themselves, <Speech_Male> rather <Speech_Male> Luke is bearing <Speech_Male> witness that <Speech_Male> such was <Speech_Male> the vibrancy, <Speech_Male> the zeal, <Speech_Male> the <Speech_Male> spiritual life and <Speech_Male> energy <Speech_Male> among these <Speech_Male> believers in <Speech_Male> Antioch <Speech_Male> that the unbelievers <Speech_Male> in the city <Speech_Male> could pick them out in a <Speech_Male> crowd and identify <Speech_Male> them as <Speech_Male> belonging to the church <Speech_Male> belonging to <Speech_Male> that group who <Speech_Male> seemed to see <Speech_Male> everything <Speech_Male> in light <SpeakerChange> of <Speech_Male> this Christ. <Speech_Male> <Silence> <Speech_Male> Where every aspect of <Speech_Male> their lives is orientated <Speech_Male> around this <Speech_Male> Christ that they follow. <Silence> <Speech_Male> And ever are <Speech_Male> they talking about <Speech_Male> their Christ, <Silence> <Speech_Male> those Christ people? <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> Those Christians. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Silence> And <Speech_Male> that it seems to <Speech_Male> me, brother, <Silence> is what <Speech_Male> we should be after. <Silence> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> The question is <Speech_Male> not whether <Speech_Male> or not <Speech_Male> I am willing to take <Speech_Male> the name of Christ <Speech_Male> upon myself. <Speech_Male> The <Speech_Male> real question <Speech_Male> I need to be asking <Speech_Male> myself <Silence> is <Speech_Male> what anyone <Speech_Male> outside the church think <Speech_Male> to apply <Speech_Male> this label <Speech_Male> to me. <Speech_Male> <Silence> <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> Am I <Speech_Male> giving them <Speech_Male> every reason <Speech_Male> to label me <Speech_Male> one of those <Silence> people <Speech_Male> to Christ, <Speech_Male> am I giving <Speech_Male> them any reason <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> to label <Speech_Male> me one of <Speech_Male> those people? <Silence> <Speech_Male> Who belong <SpeakerChange> to Christ? <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Silence> <SpeakerChange> Oh, <Speech_Male> how we need. <Speech_Male> Brethren, to <Speech_Male> be filled <Silence> with the Holy <Speech_Male> Spirit. <Speech_Male> Led by the <Speech_Male> Holy Spirit, <Speech_Male> walking in step <Speech_Male> with the Holy Spirit. <Speech_Male> Oh, how we need <Speech_Male> to be set ablaze <Speech_Male> for Christ <Speech_Male> that ever his <Speech_Male> name would be <Speech_Male> upon our <Speech_Male> lips. <Speech_Male> Oh, how we need to be <Speech_Male> running hard <Speech_Male> after our beloved <Speech_Male> sick <Speech_Male> with love <Speech_Male> for our Jesus, <Speech_Male> utterly <Speech_Male> lost <Speech_Male> in wonder <Speech_Male> love <Speech_Male> and praise. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Oh, may our gracious <Speech_Male> father who <Speech_Male> loves to give <Speech_Male> good gifts to <Speech_Male> his children, <Speech_Male> give us the <Speech_Male> Holy Spirit. And <Speech_Male> so revive <Speech_Male> our hearts <Speech_Male> for the sake of <Speech_Male> his great name, <Speech_Male> and for the building <Speech_Male> up of his church. <Speech_Male> In this place, amen.

Luke Antioch
"antioch" Discussed on Evangelism on SermonAudio

Evangelism on SermonAudio

05:40 min | 4 months ago

"antioch" Discussed on Evangelism on SermonAudio

"For one, we'll scarcely die for a righteous man says Paul. Though perhaps for a good man, one would dare even to die. A Barnabas was that kind of man. He was that kind of brother. And the point here we don't want to miss brethren is that his good character was evidenced in this. That he looked upon even these newly converted Christians, these newly converted and no doubt a bit messy brethren. And he discerned the grace of God in them. He saw grace, and he was moved to rejoice with them. And to rejoice over them, and then out of a deep love for them and concern for them out of a deep desire to see them finish the race that they had so recently began, Barnabas encouraged them. He encouraged them onto perseverance. He exhorted them unto Christ to ever be looking to Jesus. And he did so. By the word. And let's make note as well that this was Barnabas focus here in this newly planted church, not to give these new believers a gospel track and turn them loose to their neighbors and in some sort of scheme to boost their numbers. But rather Barnabas came to them, and he labored among them. To see them grow in fortitude and spiritual stature to prepare them to stand firm and to run the race to encourage them unto perseverance. But notice as well, the result. The inverse 23, when he came and saw the grace of God, he was glad, and he exhorted them all to remain faithful to the lord, with steadfast steadfast purpose for he was a good man full of the Holy Spirit and of faith. And a great, many people were added to the lord. Barnabas focus was on discipling these new believers unto greater fortitude and spiritual stature. And the lord honored that.

Barnabas Paul
"antioch" Discussed on Evangelism on SermonAudio

Evangelism on SermonAudio

03:26 min | 4 months ago

"antioch" Discussed on Evangelism on SermonAudio

"These believers needed to be exhorted. They needed to be encouraged right away not to turn to the left or to the right, not to look back with longing hearts at the Egypt. They left behind, but to stay the course to remain faithful to the lord, who had so graciously suffered and died. For their sake, to remain to abide in Christ to keep trusting his word, looking to his promises, banking on his love for them to abide in Christ is to abide in his love in his word in his promises. It is to fight the good fight of faith to keep on looking to Jesus, no matter what kind of storm is raging around us, threatening to sink us, just keep looking to Jesus. Trusting in his word in his promises, trusting in his love remaining faithful to him, abiding in his love for he has ever faithful and true to us. This is the ministry of encouragement, brethren, the ministry that each and every one of us has been called to in this body to exhort one another daily to turn one another's eyes towards the savior to look full in his wonderful face till the things of this earth, whether pleasurable or painful. Grow strangely dim. In the light of his glory. And grace. Oh, there is light for a look at the savior. A life more abundant and free. Amen. Have you noticed how Luke just loves Barnabas? He just loves to tell his readers about this brother. And about his gracious character. His blessed heart. There's 24 for he was a good man, says Luke. Here is a good man. Full of the Holy Spirit and of faith. And notice the link between verse 23 inverse 24. The four at the beginning of earth 24 connects it to what was said in verse 23. In other words, verse 24 gives the reason for Barnabas's eye for the grace of God and his rejoicing at the sight of it in others and his encouraging exhortation that follows Barnabas recognized above all else the grace of God in every believer and rejoiced at the sight of it and labored then to encourage all his brethren because he was a good man. Full of the Holy Spirit and faith. By an Barnabas was a good man. A kind man, a caring man. The humble sort of man that was for his brothers and sisters. And was always quick to answer the call to go to and to encourage a brother or sister in need. Barnabas was a good man. The kind of man that someone might actually be willing to die for. Not merely a righteous man,

ministry of encouragement, bre Barnabas Egypt Luke
"antioch" Discussed on Evangelism on SermonAudio

Evangelism on SermonAudio

03:36 min | 4 months ago

"antioch" Discussed on Evangelism on SermonAudio

"It. As all encouragers do. Barnabas was able to look at these new believers. And see, behold, identify the grace of God upon them. Now, this fellowship in Antioch was made up of recent converts and so surely there were a high number of immature Christians among them. And again, these are mostly gentiles who have been long living in a gentile city known throughout the empire for its debauchery. Idolatry and immorality, just 5 miles away was a temple well known for its cult prostitution. Surely these new converted gentiles would appear at least at this early point a bit rough around the edges to this Jewish Christian coming from the holy city. Oh, the faults and shortcomings Barnabas could have identified in this newly formed fellowship, and yet we are told only that Barnabas beheld the grace of God in that place. The grace of God at work in the bold proclamation of these hellenist Christians having suffered in Jerusalem. They yet boldly proclaim Christ even among these unfamiliar, gentiles, and the grace of God in opening the eyes of these sinners, these far off pagan idolaters. One moment, lost in ignorance, loving their sin and the next moment worshiping Jesus. Turning. And believing on Christ. Oh, brethren, if we are to be an encouragement to one another for the mutual edification of this church, then we need to have the eye of Barnabas more and more. The eye of an encourager. The eye for the grace of God at work in this body and at work in each one of our brothers in sisters. And we need to speak to it when we recognize it. Using our words to build one another up, not empty flattery, but genuine appreciation for the work of God, the grace of God that we behold in one another. Even a joy and excitement at seeing what God is doing in and through my brothers and sisters. For this was Barnabas's reaction to the grace that he saw here in Antioch. Again, versus 23 when he came and saw the grace of God, he was glad. He rejoiced, he rejoiced and exhorted them all to remain faithful to the lord with steadfast purpose. He was not threatened. He saw the grace of God upon them. He rejoiced with and over them. And thirdly, he exhorted them all to remain faithful. To abide in the lord with steadfast purpose. Barnabas had enough experience in the Christian walk to know that I wasn't going to get any easier for these new believers. In fact, it was only going to get harder. Their battle was sin was just beginning. The cares and affairs of the ancient world would ever threaten to distract them, pull them away from the faith, trials and tribulations of all sorts would bear against them as a heavy load often too much to bear alone, even the roaring lion would be prowling around seeking. To devour

Barnabas Antioch Jerusalem
"antioch" Discussed on Evangelism on SermonAudio

Evangelism on SermonAudio

02:45 min | 4 months ago

"antioch" Discussed on Evangelism on SermonAudio

"Leaving to make somewhere else home and then simply speaking of Jesus of Christ and the love of Christ wherever they go, the recipe for the expansion of the church through planting the church in its most basic form includes faithful disciples filled with the spirit preaching the word. Faithful disciples filled with the spirit. Preaching the word. And next, I would submit to you that from this same recipe, season now with no small amount of exhortation is the growth of the church to be sought as well. The church is grown through faithful disciples filled with the spirit exhorting and encouraging one another through the preaching of the word. Verse 22, the report of this came to the ears of the church in Jerusalem, and they sent Barnabas to Antioch. When he came and saw the grace of God, he was glad and he exhorted them all to remain faithful to the lord with steadfast purpose for he was a good man full of the Holy Spirit and of faith. And a great many people were added to the lord. Barnabas was not this brother's formal name. But rather a nickname given him by the brethren, and so here is an example where a name in details you a lot about the character of the man. Barnabas means son of encouragement. And so those brethren who knew this brother best decided to call him by this name because it was most fitting. A most fitting name for Barnabas, one that revealed Barnabas very nature, his heart. His gifting. Barnabas was by nature and encourager. He loved to encourage his brothers and sisters. It was his bent. And in the wisdom of those leading in Jerusalem, Barnabas then is selected to go to this newly formed church plant Antioch. And this character trait of Barnabas is on full display in the report that follows. For in his first in his willingness to make this long journey to Antioch in order to exhort or to encourage these new believers, and then in what Barnabas first sees as he enters this newly formed fellowship versus 23 when he came and saw the grace of God. Barnabas saw the grace of God. He recognized it. He discerned it

Barnabas Antioch Jerusalem
"antioch" Discussed on Evangelism on SermonAudio

Evangelism on SermonAudio

04:58 min | 4 months ago

"antioch" Discussed on Evangelism on SermonAudio

"Significant church plant be recognized as Greeks. Or gentiles. For surely the contrast that Luke is making here is between the many disciples who evangelized only Jews and the few here who took this most commendable step in evangelizing non Jews. A gentiles. If it had been merely to Greek speaking Jews that these disciples were speaking, it would hardly even be noteworthy at this point. Nor would it necessarily attract such curiosity from the Jerusalem church. And in addition, later on Barnabas travels to tarsus to call on Paul, apparently identifying Paul is a perfect fit for ministry among these new converts and this it reasons is at least partly owing to the fact that varna bis knows of God's particular call upon Paul to minister among gentiles. And so we understand it verse 19. Now those who were scattered because of the persecution that arose over Stephen traveled as far as Phoenicia and Cyprus and Antioch, speaking the word to no one except Jews, but there were some of them men of Cyprus and cyrene who on coming to Antioch spoke to the Greeks. To gentiles, also preaching the lord Jesus to them. And the hand of the lord was on them. And a great number who believed turned to the lord. The faithfulness of these few was in accord with the will of God revealed to them and thus, therefore, the hand of the lord, the power of God to save, was with them. And a great harvest among these gentiles was the result. A great number says Luke believed in turn to the lore that is they repented and believed on Jesus and were saved. And the result of this great influx of gentile souls into the kingdom was the planting of a church or the planting of the church here in Antioch. In fact, the planting of the first predominantly gentile church in what was a major city in the ancient world. Antioch, boasting a population of over half a million was the third largest city in the empire behind only Rome and Alexandria. Antioch was a most influential and important city in the empire, and the church community that formed within this city likewise became most influential and important. In the advance of the gospel and the growth of the church, the church in Antioch would become as FF Bruce comments, the metropolis of gentile, Christianity. The Christian history in Christian history writes Richard longnecker, apart from Jerusalem, no other city of the Roman Empire played as large a part in the early life and fortunes of the church as Antioch of Syria. It was the birthplace of foreign missions, the sending church of the apostle Paul and home base for Paul's outreach to the eastern half of the empire. It had among its teachers such illustrious persons as Barnabas Paul and Peter in the first century ignatius and theophilus in the second and Lucian Theodore system, theodoret, as well as a host of others at the end of the third throughout the fourth centuries.

Antioch Jerusalem church Paul Cyprus Luke tarsus Barnabas Phoenicia cyrene Stephen FF Bruce Richard longnecker Alexandria Rome sending church of the apostle Jerusalem Barnabas Paul Syria Lucian Theodore theophilus
"antioch" Discussed on Evangelism on SermonAudio

Evangelism on SermonAudio

02:44 min | 4 months ago

"antioch" Discussed on Evangelism on SermonAudio

"In another, for as they go, they refuse to keep silent. For they are not running in cowering in fear, but rather they are being led by the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit who would plant the seed of the church through the martyr through the blood of the martyrs in some cases, and through the scattering of evangelizing saints. In other cases. And I would challenge us to consider the difference. Whether one stays to suffer or flees to preach elsewhere is not determined by one's personality or spiritual deficiency. But rather, by one's walking in step with the Holy Spirit, being led by the Holy Spirit, guided by the spirit to see God's will done his kingdom come in whatever circumstances we find ourselves. First 19 now those who were scattered because of the persecution that arose over Stephen traveled as far as Phoenicia and Cyprus and Antioch, speaking the word, wherever they traveled and wherever they landed, they were speaking the word proclaiming Christ. However, they were speaking the word verse 19 again to no one except Jews. Here we see the delay in the many to apply what they have learned in affirmed regarding the intentions of God in the dispensation of his grace. Or for the most part, they stick to what is most comfortable, sharing Christ with their own. But verse 20, there were some of them men of Cyprus and cyrene that is hellenist, Greek speaking Jews who on coming to Antioch spoke to the hellenes also. Preaching the lord, Jesus. Now, we must cover a quick technical point here in the ESV, the objects of the evangelistic endeavors of these hellenists are said to be themselves hellenists, while in some other versions they are reported as Greeks. Or gentiles. And this is owing to the fact that there is division among the manuscripts regarding the actual term used here. And the problem this presents is that hellenists would tend in Luke to point to Greek speaking Jews, as I have been using the term thus far and not to Greek gentiles. However, the context here demands that these new converts making up this most

Antioch Cyprus Phoenicia Stephen cyrene Luke
"antioch" Discussed on Evangelism on SermonAudio

Evangelism on SermonAudio

03:19 min | 4 months ago

"antioch" Discussed on Evangelism on SermonAudio

"Whole structure being joined together grows into a holy temple in the lord in him, you also are being built together into a dwelling place for God by the spirit. One new man in place of the two, not gentiles becoming Jews, not Jews becoming gentiles. But rather the two becoming one new man reconciling us both to God in one new body through the Christ. This piece Christ purchased in his own blood and this piece he was bringing to fruition now in the church. And Luke is here recording in detail it's coming to pass. As the a gospel advances again, breaking through barriers, moving from the first converts among the gentiles now to the first intentional evangelism of gentiles in Antioch. The Jerusalem church has accepted as a doctrine that no one is unclean and that God will be gracious to whomever he will be gracious. You are gentile. However, the mental assent to that doctrinal stance was simply not enough. Yes, it is true that Christ was sovereignly and providentially at work, advancing his gospel in adding to his church. The details of the last account and Luke's repeating of them several times has hammered that reality home for sure. However, God has chosen to use his church. Christ disciples in accomplishing that mission. In fact, to use most often, unnamed disciples to gather in his elect. And so simply affirming that God has saved gentiles is not enough, rather the church must become minded. Michelin minded with regards to the nations to the gentiles. The church must see that God not only has saved gentiles, but that God desires to save more gentiles. In fact, it is his aim, his will to save many more for his glory. For God has elect among all peoples and he is sending his church out to gather them in to the praise of his glorious grace. And this missional mindedness towards the gentiles towards the nations is first birthed amongst some of the hellenist Jews who have fled the holy city. We see here in the opening in the opening of this text how those who had been previously pushed out of the city of Jerusalem by the Providence of God through the persecution of the church there have fanned out into the surrounding regions in an ever expanding radius and are preaching the gospel as they go and as they settle in various towns in villages. It is important to note I think that these first Christians are not running in hiding rather they are fleeing in order to preach the gospel, another day to another crowd. Oftentimes, in fact, fleeing one city only to suffer.

Jerusalem church Luke Antioch Michelin Jerusalem
"antioch" Discussed on Evangelism on SermonAudio

Evangelism on SermonAudio

02:55 min | 4 months ago

"antioch" Discussed on Evangelism on SermonAudio

"Axe chapter 11 beginning adverse 19. Now those who were scattered because of the persecution that arose over Stephen traveled as far as Phoenicia and Cyprus and Antioch, speaking the word to no one except Jews. But there were some of them men of Cyprus and cyrene, who on coming to Antioch spoke to the hellenes also preaching the lord Jesus. And the hand of the lord was with them, and a great number who believed turned to the lord. The report of this came to the ears of the church in Jerusalem, and they sent Barnabas to Antioch. When he came and saw the grace of God, he was glad, and he exhorted them all to remain faithful to the lord with steadfast purpose. For he was a good man. Full of the Holy Spirit, and of faith. And a great many people were added to the lord. So Barnabas went to tarsus to look for Saul. And when he had found him, he brought him to Antioch for a whole year, they met with the church and taught a great many people and in Antioch, the disciples were first called Christians. Now in these days, profits came down from Jerusalem to Antioch. And one of them named agaba stood up in foretold by the spirit that there would be a great famine over all the world this took place in the days of Claudius. So the disciples determined everyone according to his ability to send relief to the brothers living in Judea. And they did so sending it to the elders by the hand of Barnabas and Saul. He may be seated. The gentile Pentecost of the previous account saw the first conversion among the gentiles with the conversion of the Roman centurion Cornelius, along with his household, it is, I think, hard to overstate the monumental shift in the advance of the gospel that took place in those 66 verses. We looked at last time with God. So intimately directing the events of that narrative in order to make it crystal clear to the Jewish Christians that made up the church at that point that no person, no peoples are to be viewed as common. Or unclean.

Antioch Barnabas Cyprus Phoenicia cyrene Jerusalem agaba Saul tarsus Stephen Claudius Judea Cornelius
"antioch" Discussed on WBBM Newsradio

WBBM Newsradio

02:03 min | 7 months ago

"antioch" Discussed on WBBM Newsradio

"In Antioch the BP at around 45 and route one 73 selling gas for three 80 a gallon, and in east Chicago, the Luke at Carol and Indianapolis has gas for three 85 a gallon. 5 38 traffic and weather together on the 8 shares bow Duran, our first one of the day it happened on the southbound side of the tri state tollway talking about a spinout crash vehicle struck the wall ended up perpendicular to the road in the left lane. This is on the southbound side of the tri state right at half day road that crash is being cleared out of the left lane and trying to move everything over to the shoulder as we speak, but on the southbound side of the tri state as you make your way past, half day road, get over to the right and give them some space to work. The northbound tri state is okay. The rest of the Illinois tollways, no major problems, but the roads are wet, take it easy. On the Jane Adams and the Reagan, especially further west, the snow is coming down all the way out to the Fox river. On three 55, no major delays at the moment on the Eden zone in and outbound trips so far okay, the Kennedy inbound slowing already from nagle to Lawrence, the outbound side of the Kennedy saw from nagle to Harlem. Eisenhower inbound slow go now from first avenue to central, you're looking at 34 minutes from the Jane Adams into the burn interchange 16 in from mannheim, the op-ed Eisenhower slope from Harlem to first avenue, Stevenson and bound slow spots from three 55 to county line, then again from Harlem to the Dan Ryan already 38 minutes from three 55 25 in from the tri state outbound slow from the grains to the tri state tollway, the dam right inbound slowing from the merge, the skyway, and then from Pershing to the burn interchange already reduced speeds on the Dan Ryan 90 minutes from 95th in, but I'll bounce okay, both I 57 of the bishop Ford starting to see some slow spots building up, particularly on the bishop Ford, it's heavy off and on from sibley to the Dan Ryan watch for slick spots on the steel bridge. That's a notorious spot here on the inbound side of the Ford right now. It's 25 minutes at 94 to the Dan Ryan. Du sabba Lake shore drive, you're okay on the north and south on trips along the lakefront, rob 53 in the northwest suburbs all right as well, no major problems on I 80, no major hassles for hoosiers just yet, 80 94 I 65 in the toll road looking all right so far on this Tuesday morning, but the snow is coming in the Lake effect snow will impact that in northwestern Indiana next traffic report from the metro traffic center at 5 48 news radio 105 9. Mac weather

Jane Adams Dan Ryan Harlem nagle Antioch ed Eisenhower Duran Kennedy Indianapolis Carol Fox river Luke Chicago Reagan mannheim Eisenhower Ford Illinois Lawrence Stevenson
 13 dead, 21 wounded in school shooting in Russia

AP News Radio

00:33 sec | 8 months ago

13 dead, 21 wounded in school shooting in Russia

"A gunman has opened fire in a school in central Russia killing at least 15 including a high number of children before shooting himself dead The shooting took place in school number 88 in E so here a city 600 miles east of Moscow in the ud mortier region Governor Alexander Bashar lof says the killer's name was Antioch Kazan and that he was a resident of the town and registered at a psychoneurological dispensary There

Governor Alexander Bashar Lof Russia Antioch Kazan Moscow
"antioch" Discussed on The Book Review

The Book Review

08:08 min | 10 months ago

"antioch" Discussed on The Book Review

"On the inside of that story and helping bring it, bring it to life. And sort of late in my life, I've made storytelling into a sort of adjunct of acting in plays. And for you, it began at an extremely early age from yellow springs, Ohio. That's right. Antioch college. That's right, my dad was on the faculty there. And you started acting very young. And he was very serious. Shakespeare, you learned early. He created Shakespeare festivals in Ohio all through my young years, four of them in all. One of them, the Great Lakes theater festival in Cleveland is still going on. And it was just part of our lives. We Antioch was the first of them and along sustained one in which he produced every single one of Shakespeare's plays. The first line of the book proper is I started acting before I even remember. Then you went to Harvard, and you say in the book, this was actually the most creative time in your life. Why? When were you there? In the 60s? I was there between 63 and 67. Interestingly, when I went to Harvard, I wasn't interested in being an actor. You wanted to be an artist. My creative ambition was to be an artist to be a painter and a printmaker. And that fell by the wayside almost immediately because I sort of fell in with a theater gang at Harvard, which is always has been by tradition tremendously active, engaged, and very talented, even though nobody goes there to study acting. Because by osmosis, I was already a very experienced actor. I just became the campus star, almost immediately. Literally within a week of arriving at Harvard, I was cast in a major role in the main stage of the low drama center. So that was the point when you realized this is what you were going to do. Yeah. By my second year at Harvard, I was spending more time doing plays directing operas designing sets for ballets, just working in everything that came along, I would try it. Anyone off to London in an equally exciting London in the 60s. Yeah. But it was just the opposite. London was tremendously rigorous academic training. They sort of thrashed us. But in a very good way. I mean, it was terrific training. John, you grew up in a theater family. Your father encouraged you, yet when you told him you'd be going to London to study acting. He was flabbergasted. Yeah, well, he didn't encourage me, but he didn't discourage me either. We never even addressed the subject. He never figured, nor I never figured that I would actually become an actor. And when I decided to audition and apply for a fulbright to go to England, it took him completely by surprise. It was a measure of how oblivious he was. About what was really going on with me. But you also say how innocent naive you were. Exactly. It was a sort of dual misperception of each other. So I told him good news that I'm going to, I'm going to audition for a fulbright to study acting. And his face fell as if I had told him I had a terminal disease. And at that moment, I realized how difficult the business had been for him. I think until then I had sort of seen him as this kind of, I think I describe it in the book as an insouciant ringmaster. He was a theater director who seemed to so completely enjoy what he was doing. It's an incredibly difficult profession. And on that occasion, he sort of told me just exactly what I was signing on for. If I did this, how hard it is to sustain a family to make money and thrive and prosper how unpredictable how you have to make very good friends with rejection and failure and disappointment. And he made this astonishing suggestion. He said, why not business school? It was like a suggestion from Mars. And did he even really mean that? He did. He said on that occasion. He admitted to feeling very inept as a manager. And making budgets, personnel issues, he said, you could learn this. You could acquire this. He always regretted that he hadn't learned administrative skills. And I just thought, this was the craziest suggestion I'd ever heard. I wanted to be an artiste. And in some way, did that steal you and your resolve? I mean, it's kind of the classic thing. Dad says no. I don't think I was defiant. I just ignored the advice. I just went ahead and did what I was planning to do. PS within a year, he was hiring me. Not only to act, but to direct and design for him. Okay, now I'm going to ask you something very different that made you the envy of me and all my male colleagues at the book review. You had involvement with the singular, live Allman. How did that happen? Why you? Why me? Well, I was cast opposite her in a very passionate play, Anna Christie. A play that has begat, for example, the marriage of Liam Neeson and Natasha Richardson, you know, great O'Neill play about Anna Christie the prostitute and Matt and Burke, the Irish coal Stoker, who meet in a shipwreck, she saves him, he falls madly in love with her, I feel mad, and I would leave. Of course, I was already in love with Liv, as obviously you were, too, back in those days. My entire long chapter on that chapter of my life is a chapter about the volatile chemicals of acting. I mean, the fact that you put your emotions to work. That can lead to a very intense, emotional involvement, almost in spite of yourself. And just so our listeners are reassured, you're also the author of 7 or 8 children. Yes. And when did that begin? And why? Well, there's a chapter in the book about that. And it's a chapter about my baby sister, Sarah Jane, who was ten years younger than I, there are three of us siblings older than Sarah Jane. So she grew up with two real parents and three sibling parents. And I was the closest to her in age. So when my older siblings took off for school, it was Sarah Jane and me in the household, and I was her constant babysitter kind of best pal. When I was 15 or so, when she was 5, or I was 16 and she was 6, I entertained her. I adored her. I still adore her. That was the beginnings of entertaining children when my own children came along. I was already writing songs and playing the guitar for kids. I started performing concerts for school benefits and in their classrooms. Before you knew it, I was a kids entertainer and really loved doing it. This was concurrently with my beginning career at the beginnings of my career as an actor. And it's such an incredibly fun thing to do. Kids audiences are so astonishingly responsive. They're difficult audiences, but they're very, very exciting. As much today as they were generally well, kids don't change. And I write about that in great detail in the book, the whole phenomenon of suspension of disbelief. That's what you, that's what you seek as an actor in front of an adult audience, but you never attain it. An adult audience always knows your pretending. Kids lose all track of that. They barely even remember their inner theater. They are so engaged. And I just love that. John, at one point in the book, you mentioned some of the really

Harvard London Shakespeare Anna Christie Ohio Antioch college yellow springs Antioch Great Lakes Cleveland Sarah Jane Natasha Richardson England Allman Liam Neeson John Neill Stoker Liv
Pet-Friendly (MM #4054)

The Mason Minute

01:00 min | 1 year ago

Pet-Friendly (MM #4054)

"The NASA minute. With Kevin mason. For the last few years, Nashville has been one of the fastest growing cities in America. I've seen studies that say it's first. I've seen studies that say it's second, some that say it's 5th or whatever it is, but we're growing fast. And one of our neighborhoods is the number one fastest growing pet friendly community in the U.S., our suburb, if you will, or our section of Nashville called Antioch, is rated number one for being pet friendly and the fastest growing pet friendly city in America. The reason why, number one, lots of apartments, number two, more reasonable rents, and number three, the pandemic changed so much, more and more people staying home, getting pets during the pandemic and Nashville has benefited from that. I don't know if that's good. I don't know if it's bad, and I don't know if it's real. Sometimes we just create surveys just to have something to talk about. Sure, Nashville is growing fast and our Antioch community. A lot of people are moving there because it's affordable. But being the fastest growing pet friendly community in America, I gotta shake my head. In America, how do we judge that?

Mason Minute Kevin Mason Baby Boomers Life Culture Society Musings Nashville America Nasa Antioch
Pet-Friendly (MM #4054)

The Mason Minute

01:00 min | 1 year ago

Pet-Friendly (MM #4054)

"The NASA minute. With Kevin mason. For the last few years, Nashville has been one of the fastest growing cities in America. I've seen studies that say it's first. I've seen studies that say it's second, some that say it's 5th or whatever it is, but we're growing fast. And one of our neighborhoods is the number one fastest growing pet friendly community in the U.S., our suburb, if you will, or our section of Nashville called Antioch, is rated number one for being pet friendly and the fastest growing pet friendly city in America. The reason why, number one, lots of apartments, number two, more reasonable rents, and number three, the pandemic changed so much, more and more people staying home, getting pets during the pandemic and Nashville has benefited from that. I don't know if that's good. I don't know if it's bad, and I don't know if it's real. Sometimes we just create surveys just to have something to talk about. Sure, Nashville is growing fast and our Antioch community. A lot of people are moving there because it's affordable. But being the fastest growing pet friendly community in America, I gotta shake my head. In America, how do we judge that?

Mason Minute Kevin Mason Baby Boomers Life Culture Society Musings Nashville America Nasa Antioch
Pet-Friendly (MM #4054)

The Mason Minute

01:00 min | 1 year ago

Pet-Friendly (MM #4054)

"The NASA minute. With Kevin mason. For the last few years, Nashville has been one of the fastest growing cities in America. I've seen studies that say it's first. I've seen studies that say it's second, some that say it's 5th or whatever it is, but we're growing fast. And one of our neighborhoods is the number one fastest growing pet friendly community in the U.S., our suburb, if you will, or our section of Nashville called Antioch, is rated number one for being pet friendly and the fastest growing pet friendly city in America. The reason why, number one, lots of apartments, number two, more reasonable rents, and number three, the pandemic changed so much, more and more people staying home, getting pets during the pandemic and Nashville has benefited from that. I don't know if that's good. I don't know if it's bad, and I don't know if it's real. Sometimes we just create surveys just to have something to talk about. Sure, Nashville is growing fast and our Antioch community. A lot of people are moving there because it's affordable. But being the fastest growing pet friendly community in America, I gotta shake my head. In America, how do we judge that?

Mason Minute Kevin Mason Baby Boomers Life Culture Society Musings Nashville America Nasa Antioch
"antioch" Discussed on The Way (Audio Podcast)

The Way (Audio Podcast)

05:34 min | 1 year ago

"antioch" Discussed on The Way (Audio Podcast)

"That's right. And God never changes. And God never changes. Because the Bible is very, very clear that when Moses happened upon that burning bush that we've talked about a couple of times, it's very clear that the being inside that Bush was the angel of the lord. That was the third person of the godly Trinity that Moses was afraid to look at. Right. So God never changes. He is the exact same being who came to and told the church of Antioch to separate Paul and Barnabas Barnabas. That's right. It was Holy Spirit, who did that. And if they weren't listening to the Rama that came on that day, where do you think the New Testament would be? Exactly. And they were fasting. It was exactly. So they were already on mission. They were already preaching, but the Holy Spirit, right? Spoke a Rama word to the church or whoever it was they didn't say who it was. They just said it spoke it. It might have been either one of them. Separate them out to the missions. And sent them out. And so this is really important. So we're going to look at a bunch of metaphors as we go along. And before we move along, I just want to make sure our listeners understand that, yes, we are saying that the Holy Spirit will speak to you. He'll also help give you functionings, feelings, compulsions, and we covered all the things that can take place in the other show. Well, look at some of these, so don't think that the Holy Spirit is just there to make you feel all warm and warm and fuzzy when you hear your favorite worship song. No. When it's time to act, when God, when you're asking God something, when you're asking to be used, rema will take place through the Holy Spirit, listen to that, and don't dismiss that. Because you're on a mission and so is he. That's right. His mission is to get you through. Every human being is on this earth for one reason and one reason only. And that is to decide for themselves in this womb we call life down here, which Jesus didn't even call it life. Because when we graduate to heaven or hell in her life, when you go to heaven, he said, you enter life. Life, yeah. So this is kind of life in a sense. It's kind of a shadow and copy of life. But we're here for one reason, and that is to decide for ourselves as free moral agents where we're going to spend eternity. That's right. Will we be still born or will we be born into the kingdom of goddess living sons and daughters of God almighty for all eternity to rule and reign with him in Christ? That's his mission. So yeah, take it very seriously. When he moves in your life, when he talks in your life, he's serious. It may be with laughter and it may be with joy because I know that he loves to be that way with his children. But at the same time, he never wastes a syllable. And he's deadly serious about this..

Barnabas Barnabas Moses church of Antioch bush Bush Paul Jesus
"antioch" Discussed on WCPT 820

WCPT 820

01:32 min | 1 year ago

"antioch" Discussed on WCPT 820

"Because there is no word for alcohol and ancient Greek So what does that say about the power of their drink This is an age before distilled liquor before it's before spirit So they were spiking the line with something to give it this profile That's remarkable Is there is there any evidence in old Christian or even early Catholic writings that the wine was a little more than just wine Well you can read too much into this sometimes but I'll quote saint ignatius of Antioch He was one of these church fathers He wrote a letter to the adhesions much like much like positive And about the beginning of the second century AD shooting nations refers to the eucharist as the on ashana the drug of immortality Now again you could think that's just fancy wordplay but I think ignatius is playing on a tradition that goes back a thousand years to the time of Homer where again wine is often referred to as the pharmacon not as this innocuous beverage but as this versatile vehicle to carry different kinds of drugs to induce different kinds of experiences whether that was purely therapeutic or medicinal or whether it was for recreational purposes We know that Greeks really enjoyed their symposium Or just occasionally just occasionally something visionary what we would call a sacrament to really induce this kind of sense of communion.

Antioch ignatius Homer
"antioch" Discussed on WCPT 820

WCPT 820

01:58 min | 1 year ago

"antioch" Discussed on WCPT 820

"Different ingredients I'll just I'll say this briefly about language You can read the entire New Testament You won't see a single reference to the word alcohol because there is no word for alcohol in ancient Greek So what does that say about the power of their drink This is an age before distilled liquor before it's before spirit So they were spiking in the line with something to give it this profile That's remarkable Is there any evidence in old Christian or even early Catholic writings that the wine was a little more than just wine Well you can read too much into this sometimes but I'll book saint ignatius of Antioch He was one of these church fathers He wrote a letter to the occasions much like much like politic and about the beginning of the second century AD scenic nations refers to the eucharist as the drug of immortality Now again you could think that's just fancy wordplay but I think ignatius is playing on a tradition that goes back a thousand years to the time of Homer where again wine is often referred to as a pharmacon not as this innocuous beverage but as this versatile vehicle to carry different kinds of drugs to induce different kinds of experiences whether that was purely therapeutic or medicinal or whether it was to recreational purposes We know that Greeks really enjoyed their symposium Or just occasionally just occasionally something visionary what we would call a sacrament to really induce this kind of sense of communion with your chosen wine God Well it makes sense that it would be wine because it has both water and alcohol in it and some drugs are water soluble or ten more to be water soluble Others are more alcohol soluble So it would be kind of the ultimate all.

Antioch ignatius Homer
"antioch" Discussed on Apex Church

Apex Church

05:47 min | 1 year ago

"antioch" Discussed on Apex Church

"To go and look, barnabas had met tall just after his conversion, maybe a couple of years after his conversion. And he helped Paul get to meet Peter and then send him on his way to toss us, and when he saw Antioch, he remember the story that this young man Paul had said that Paul had heard from Jesus that he was to go with the message of Salvation to all the gentiles and he at barnabas could see it happening before his very eyes and so he went to find Paul brought him back and they enjoyed a wonderful time of spiritual harvest. Profits from Jerusalem came up to encourage the believers. One of them called agabus as part of that mission of prophetic teaching. Told the church that a famine was coming upon the world and sure enough it did in the time of Claudius this famine was going to be very severe, especially for the people in Judea. And so the church in Antioch led by Paul and barnabas gathered a gift and they sent Paul and barnabas town to Jerusalem to support the poor that were there. Paul talks about this in galatians chapter two versus one to 7. He doesn't mention the gift because of course he doesn't want to promote himself as some kind of special person, but he tells the gentiles believers in galatia that when he went to Jerusalem, he talked to the pillars of the church. Peter James and John, about what it was that he believed the good news of Jesus was. And they added nothing to his message, but gave him the right hand of fellowship. And so he returned to Antioch with great joy. Back in Jerusalem in chapter 12 of the actually the apostles, we hear of Peter getting imprisoned and miraculously escaping and leaving the city of Jerusalem. Perhaps really very rarely to return again because of becoming this marked man. And then in axe chapter 13, we see Paul and barnabas back in Antioch, praying and fasting with the other leaders of that church and the Holy Spirit says you need to go and do the thing that I've asked you to do. And so off they go on their first missionary journey, and they're returning in acts chapter 14 and it's such a joyful time as they talk about the door that's been open to the gentiles that God has done such a great work..

barnabas Paul Jerusalem Antioch Peter Jesus Claudius Judea galatia Peter James John
Prosecutors request arrest warrant after Kyle Rittenhouse accused of violating bond

John Landecker

00:36 sec | 2 years ago

Prosecutors request arrest warrant after Kyle Rittenhouse accused of violating bond

"Coming up. The prosecutors in Wisconsin are asking for an arrest warrant for Kyle written house. He's the Antioch teenager accused of fatally shooting two people in Kenosha and of shooting and wounding a third during protests sparked by the Kenosha police involved shooting of Jacob Blake He's now accused of violating the terms of his $2 million bond. Prosecutors say detectives went to the address written house had listed on his body and found no longer lives there. The written house's lawyers have since released a statement saying in part, Britain House and his family have been living in a safe house because of death threats. Written

Kenosha Police Jacob Blake Kenosha Kyle Wisconsin Britain House
"antioch" Discussed on KGO 810

KGO 810

01:46 min | 2 years ago

"antioch" Discussed on KGO 810

"The pandemic more than 350,000 Americans have now died from covert 19. You're listening to ABC News. Now checking kgo traffic in Livermore 5 80 westbound just before Basco Road to car crash on the shoulder. There's a bit of dense fog in the area here as well. Also looking at some foggy conditions on the bay Bridge, the car keen as bridge around this number, Raceway on highway 37 along the Waldo grade in the sand, the tail high will highlands a car spun out. And hit a pole there. That's holding up a sign. The right lane has blocked as part of that problem looking at some problems on Bart right now, 10 minute delays on the anti offline in the Antioch line in SFO directions and on the Berryessa line in the Richmond direction. This is all due to some equipment work that has been going on. Kgo traffic. I'm Dean Michael's. The following show is paid for by three dimensional wealth. The views, opinions and beliefs, expressed her those of three dimensional wealth and don't necessarily reflect those of the staff management of cumulus media or other partners. Doug Andrew here you know, is a financial strategist and retirement planning specialist for more than 45 years. I finally have dedicated the last two years to writing the ultimate book, the Laser fund. How to diversify and create the foundation for a tax free retirement is my favorite vehicle, and we have collected over 200 pages of charts, graphs and illustrations to empower you. And if you're more right brain you learn by stories. You flip the book over and you read it the other direction. It contains 62 stories of actual clients who've employed The laser fund to diversify and save hundreds of thousands of dollars of unnecessary tax..

Laser fund Doug Andrew bay Bridge ABC News cumulus media Livermore Dean Michael Bart Richmond
Motive remains elusive 48-plus hours after downtown Nashville explosion

AM Tampa Bay

00:24 sec | 2 years ago

Motive remains elusive 48-plus hours after downtown Nashville explosion

"Man named Anthony Quinn, Warner 63, identified as the national bomber remains found at the scene were matched to him through DNA testing. He's of Antioch, Tennessee, the only person killed by the van explosion in downtown Nashville in the early hours of Christmas morning. He worked in Nashville for a lot of years, sometimes is a burglar alarm specialist. Most recently it's a computer technician for local real estate firm. Sports a motive. Nothing as of yet

Anthony Quinn Warner Nashville Antioch Tennessee
Antioch, TN Neighbors Recognize RV Used in Nashville Explosion

Coast to Coast AM with George Noory

00:43 sec | 2 years ago

Antioch, TN Neighbors Recognize RV Used in Nashville Explosion

"A suspect in connection with the Christmas Day bombing in Nashville, Tennessee, to law enforcement sources close to the investigation say a man named Anthony Quinn Warner was behind the blast. One source called him a lone wolf and believes there is no danger to the city of Nashville. This afternoon yesterday, FBI agents armed with a search warrant comb through Warner's home in the Nashville suburb of Antioch, Tennessee. Neighbors say up until a few days ago, an RV sat in Warner's driveway. Authorities believe that was the RV scene and downtown Nashville Christmas morning before it exploded. As for a motive, that is something that is still under investigation at this point boxes David Spot reporting and the U. S Embassy

Nashville Anthony Quinn Warner Tennessee Warner FBI Antioch David Spot U. S Embassy
Nashville explosion investigation prompts FBI to search home

AP News Radio

00:54 sec | 2 years ago

Nashville explosion investigation prompts FBI to search home

"More than twenty four hours after the explosion was set off in downtown Nashville a motive remains elusive as the F. B. I. works round the clock to resolve unanswered questions about the mysterious blast federal agents searched the home yesterday about a possible person of interest in the Antioch section of Nashville a Google maps image from last year had shown a similar RV to the one in the explosion parked in the back yard just before the Christmas morning explosion police chief Jon Drake says they were on scene investigating a report of shots fired and found an RV on a mostly deserted street blaring a recorded message warning people to evacuate because a bomb would go off authorities say they found human remains they are working to ID three people were hurt in the blast which severely damaged in eighteen T. building knocking out cell wifi and nine one one service in several southern states I'm Julie Walker

F. B. I. Nashville Jon Drake Google Julie Walker
Person of interest in Nashville bombing identified by authorities

The Dennis Prager Show

00:52 sec | 2 years ago

Person of interest in Nashville bombing identified by authorities

"Calm. I've had to cost, of course with officials. Have told The Associated Press that federal investigators have identified a person of interest in connection with the explosion that rocked downtown Nashville Christmas day. Investigators from multiple federal and local law enforcement agencies were at a home in Antioch in suburban Nashville after receiving information relevant to the investigation, according to FBI Special Agent Jason Pack. Another law enforcement official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, told The Associated Press Investigators regard someone associated with the property as a person of interest in the bombing. Earlier Saturday, investigators said they were looking at a number of individuals who may be connected to the bombing but have also found no additional explosive devices. The blast, which rocked in H and G building also knocked out some 911 cell and WiFi

The Associated Press Nashville Jason Pack Antioch FBI
FBI searching suburban Nashville home in connection with Christmas Day explosion

AP 24 Hour News

01:00 min | 2 years ago

FBI searching suburban Nashville home in connection with Christmas Day explosion

"Have told The Associated Press that federal investigators have identified a person of interest in connection with the explosion that rocked downtown Nashville on Christmas Day. Investigators from multiple federal and local law enforcement agencies were at a home in Antioch in suburban Nashville after receiving information relevant to the investigation, according to FBI special agent Jason Pack. Another law enforcement official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, told The Associated Press investigators regard someone associated with the property. As a person of interest in the bombing. Earlier Saturday, investigators said they were looking at a number of individuals who may be connected to the bombing but have also found no additional explosive devices. FBI special agent Doug Cornell Ski, said 250 agents, analysts and staff are working the case. Blast, which wrapped in a T and G building also knocked out some 911 cell and WiFi communications across the state. I'm Julie

The Associated Press Nashville Jason Pack Antioch FBI Doug Cornell Ski Julie
Investigators looking at more than 500 leads in Nashville bombing, officials say

Doctor Health Radio Show

00:48 sec | 2 years ago

Investigators looking at more than 500 leads in Nashville bombing, officials say

"But investigators have identified a person of interest in connection with the explosion and That rocked downtown Nashville on Christmas Day. Investigators from multiple federal and local law enforcement agencies were at a home in Antioch and suburban Nashville after receiving information relevant to the investigation, according to FBI special agent Jason Pack, another law enforcement official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, told The Associated Press. Investigators regard someone associated with the property as a person of interest in the bombing. Earlier Saturday, investigators said they were looking at a number of individuals who may be connected to the bombing but have also found no additional explosive devices. The blast, which rocked in 18 G building also knocked out some 911 cell and WiFi communications across the state.

Nashville Jason Pack Antioch FBI The Associated Press
Person of interest in Nashville bombing identified by authorities

Retirement Rescue

00:16 sec | 2 years ago

Person of interest in Nashville bombing identified by authorities

"Enforcement officials say in relation to the Nashville bombing on Christmas, authorities have identified a person of interest in searched a home linked to that person. That home is in the national suburb of Antioch, a name of the person of interest has not been released.

Nashville Antioch
Nashville latest: FBI looking at 'number of individuals' in connection with blast

Leo Laporte - The Tech Guy

00:28 sec | 2 years ago

Nashville latest: FBI looking at 'number of individuals' in connection with blast

"Found at the scene of the blast in downtown Nashville of not Had been identified, but the FBI's Doug Konarski said this at this point we don't have any indication that we're looking for another subject. The FBI is pursuing 500 tips that have come in since Christmas morning, so their number of individuals that we're looking at so at this point we're not prepared to identify any single individual. There has been FBI activity of Nashville's Antioch neighborhood while agents work with behavioral analyst to help determine a motive. Aaron

Doug Konarski FBI Nashville Antioch Aaron
The Legend Of Bea Gaddy

Encyclopedia Womannica

04:31 min | 2 years ago

The Legend Of Bea Gaddy

"Be was born. Beatrice frankie fowler in wake forest north carolina on february twentieth. Nineteen thirty three. Her family like many others found itself in dire straits during the great depression. Much of bees childhood was marked by poverty and hunger as well as her father's often violent alcoholism. These difficult home life is to child informed. Her humanitarian work later on eventually be found a way out of her house marriage. The and her husband moved to new york city to find better work but be didn't have much luck. She worked as a housekeeper for little. Hey and her marriage came to an early end soon. After leaving home. She was left to find her way as a single mother by her mid twenties be had been twice divorced and was trying to take care of her five children in nineteen sixty four. She reconnected with an old friend. Who promised her job in baltimore. She moved there with her kids and took on several jobs. These life in this new city was also difficult. She and her children spent many nights without heat or electricity. During these hard times began to ask others for help forming connections to help take care of herself and her family. This ability to create community would define many of her later efforts in organizing while working as a crossing guard be formed a friendship with the neighborhood. Attorney who encouraged her to go to college be took the advice. I finishing her high school degree through a correspondence course and later enrolling at catonsville community college. She took several courses on mental health and graduated from antioch university with a bachelor's in human services in one thousand nine hundred seventy seven b had already been working in community organizing in the early nineteen seventies. she joined the east baltimore. Children's fund and her row house soon became a distribution center for food and clothing in one thousand nine hundred eighty one be founded. The patterson park emergency food center. She stocked it by collecting donations in an old cart. She wheeled around in the winter. The center also collected and distributed toys to children during the holidays that same year. Nineteen eighty-one b. One two hundred fifty dollars on a fifty cent lottery ticket. She used her winnings to plan a thanksgiving meal that fed forty nine of her neighbors. This feast became a yearly tradition. That grew with each generation. Be soon moved the dinner to the sidewalk outside her home later. She moved into the local middle school to fit. Everyone at the table. Beast thanksgiving dinners. Were made possible by donations local grocers and willing extra hands in the kitchen from around the community be became a pillar of the baltimore community in addition to the food bank and shelter. She started a furniture bank and a program to refurbish abandoned row. Houses for families in need. She helped run summer. Youth programs and ran workshops on voter education later in life be also became an ordained minister. This allowed her to perform important duties like marriages and burials at no cost to families. In nineteen ninety nine he was elected to city council. She ran on a platform of bringing the citizens perspective back to the council and used her life experiences in baltimore to represent the voices of an often silenced community. Sadly her term was cut short when in two thousand and one be died of breast cancer. These work has been carried on by her daughters as well as the many volunteers who show up every year to help out at the organizations she helped build. the food. Pantry is known today as the gaddi family center and continues to help feed clothe and shelter. Baltimore's community the center feeds between fifty and one hundred and fifty people daily beast. Thanksgiving feast now feeds around twenty thousand people every year and is assisted by hundreds of volunteers. Who come to help these legacy levonne. It is one of baltimore's most notable thanksgiving traditions. The thanksgiving dinner right. Tens of thousands of hungry residents got a hot meal today at patterson park and all across the baltimore area During her life beat earned numerous awards for her humanitarian work. She has also been memorialized by charity efforts including be gatty day which is celebrated by a citywide food. Drive every year

Beatrice Frankie Fowler Wake Forest North Carolina Baltimore Catonsville Community College Children's Fund Patterson Park Emergency Food Local Middle School Antioch University Depression New York City Gaddi Family Center City Council Breast Cancer Patterson Park
Bail For Kyle Rittenhouse, Accused Kenosha Shooter, Set At $2 Million

WGN Programming

00:27 sec | 2 years ago

Bail For Kyle Rittenhouse, Accused Kenosha Shooter, Set At $2 Million

"Old Antioch native Kyle Riton house He's accused of fatally shooting two men and wounding a third during unrest in Kenosha back in August. Court is going to impose a $2 million cash on believing that is reasonable, necessary and sufficient at this juncture to secure the appearance of Mr Rittenhouse in Today's virtual court hearing came after a judge in Illinois ruled Friday to extradite Riton House to Kenosha. Search for at least one terror suspect continues in

Kyle Riton Antioch Kenosha Mr Rittenhouse Riton House Illinois
Illinois teen Kyle Rittenhouse will face homicide charges in Wisconsin after judge OKs extradition

Chicago's Afternoon News

00:35 sec | 2 years ago

Illinois teen Kyle Rittenhouse will face homicide charges in Wisconsin after judge OKs extradition

"An Illinois judge made a decision today on whether or not to extradite in Antioch teen facing homicide charges in Wisconsin. A Lake County judge has ordered the extradition of 17 year old Kyle Riton House to face homicide charges in Kenosha County, Wisconsin. Defense lawyers sought to convince the judge to block their clients transfer Britain houses. Attorneys argue that the team acted in self defense when he opened fire during unrest following the shooting of a black man by a white Kenosha police officer. Lake County prosecutors said it should be up to a Wisconsin judge, not one in Illinois to decide whether there are sufficient grounds for charges more lap. BA WDTN news.

Wisconsin Lake County Kenosha County Illinois Kenosha Kyle Riton House Antioch Britain Officer
Chicago - Teen charged in Kenosha shootings fights extradition

John Williams

00:33 sec | 2 years ago

Chicago - Teen charged in Kenosha shootings fights extradition

"Kyle Rittenhouse is fighting extradition. 17 year old auntie Octane who's been accused of killing two and injuring another during the protests of the Jacob Blake shooting in Kenosha last month. Fighting to return to Wisconsin is fighting a return to Wisconsin to face homicide charges that could put him in prison for life. Rittenhouse was arrested at his home in Antioch, August 25th. His attorney, says he was acting in self defense. The judge gave 14 days of the defense to review papers and file pleadings ahead of a hearing October

Kyle Rittenhouse Jacob Blake Wisconsin Kenosha Antioch Attorney